“Restoration Movements” in the Middle Ages

“Restoration Movements” in the Middle Ages

The very concept of “Restoration” indicates that something needs to be restored. What do we mean by that? Acts 2 portrays the Jerusalem church in the immediate aftermath of Pentecost as a model: they were devoted to the teachings of the apostles, they engaged in regular prayer and fellowship, and they grew exponentially. But the rest of Acts as well as the NT more generally make clear that the early church had problems too: there was division in Corinth, Judaizing teachers who claimed another way of salvation (Galatians 1:6-9), proto-Gnostics who claimed special knowledge (Colossians 2) and denied that Jesus came in the flesh (2 John), and personality conflicts (Philippians 4:2).

 

Church history has been messy from the beginning. While the church is a divine institution, the bride of Christ purchased with his own blood, it is composed of fallible human beings. Sound doctrine, correct practice, and unity have been a struggle all along. During the 1st century, the apostles were present to guide and direct the church; their teachings and writings instructed the earliest Christians in the right way. That is why it is proper to hold the 1st century church up as normative: they were not perfect, but they were apostolic. We want to follow the teachings of the NT, striving toward the ideal of God’s church.

 

By the 2nd century, the apostles were gone, and with their passing came a gradual shift in the teachings and practices of the church. Cohesion was still produced by sporadic persecution from the Roman Empire: no one became a Christian simply to get ahead in life; it required real commitment. That changed with the conversion of Constantine in the early 4th century and the eventual state church. The end of persecution was obviously a good thing. But as it became intertwined with the Empire, the church became increasingly corrupted.

 

After the fall of the Western Empire in the late 5th century, the Roman Catholic Church emerged as the center of power and culture in the West. Spiritual life for most people in the Middle Ages was dominated by superstition. Learning was at a low ebb with the explosion of the ancient world by the barbarians; accordingly, instruction in Scripture was almost non-existent, and people’s imaginations indulged in all sorts of false notions. It was also characterized by extreme dependence on the church as an institution, much like that existing in feudal society as a whole. The church controlled the 7 sacraments which were held to be the means of grace from God, and the power to bar people from them.

 

Toward the end of the Middle Ages, Thomas Aquinas applied the philosophy of Aristotle to develop Scholasticism. This ultimately produced churchmen who were ignorant in Scripture, but given to debate and clever arguments. So by the Renaissance, European Christianity ran in these 2 divergent streams: superstition and dependence on the church controlled the common people, while the clergy engaged in disputes completely irrelevant to those same people. For both groups, Scripture was essentially forgotten.

 

In the midst of this, there were exceptions who sought reform – even some who sought to restore the primitive church. One such man was Peter Waldo (c. 1140-1218), a rich merchant in Lyon, France. One day, he approached a priest to ask how to live like Christ. The priest gave him the answer Jesus gave the Rich Young Ruler. Waldo followed the counsel, providing an income for his wife, placing his 2 daughters in a convent, and then giving the rest of his estate to the poor. His movement came to emphasize 3 points: voluntary poverty; access to Scripture in the vernacular (rather than Latin); and public preaching. Waldo enlisted 2 priests to translate the Bible into French. After memorizing long passages himself, he began to teach commoners to imitate Christ by practicing poverty. As he gained followers, he sent them out 2 by 2 to preach, just like the apostles.

 

But Waldo’s preaching was unauthorized. The Archbishop of Lyon ordered him to stop; he refused, quoting Peter in Acts 5:29, we must obey God rather than men. Ultimately, because he persisted in his preaching and continued to gain followers, Pope Lucius III excommunicated him and his movement in 1184. You see, the Waldensians (as we know them today) wanted to purify the church by returning to the simple life of the apostles. But that would mean that the church would have to surrender its worldly power. Furthermore, through their study of Scripture in their own language, the Waldensians had come to reject certain practices of the medieval church: prayers for the dead, purgatory, the veneration of saints and images. Their concern to live by the Sermon on the Mount meant that they refused to take oaths or participate in any killing. They survived intense persecution in the Alpine valleys, coming into contact with the larger Protestant Reformation in an accommodation with the Calvinists in 1532 – the only medieval sect to have a documented continuity to the present.

 

If space permitted, we could examine later figures like John Wyclif in England (1328-1384) and John Hus in Bohemia (1373-1415). All of these movements looked to the example of the NT church, sought to place Scripture in the hands of the common people, and called for a simple piety based on the Bible. But the medieval church did their best to crush all opposition, just as they forced the Waldensians underground for centuries: Wyclif was compelled to retire, and his followers, the Lollards, were suppressed; Hus was burned at the stake as a heretic.  Thus, churches of Christ cannot claim any sort of direct influence from any of these groups. But many of these radical dissenters anticipated much of what we believe and practice; their common call, to study the Scriptures and see them as normative for the church, is certainly familiar. The courage these men and their followers demonstrated is admirable, and their commitment to follow Jesus despite tremendous personal cost is an example to us all.

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